William Poulson
University of Nebraska Medical Center
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Featured researches published by William Poulson.
Acta Biomaterialia | 2016
Alexey Kamenskiy; Andreas Seas; Grant Bowen; Paul Deegan; Anastasia Desyatova; Nick Bohlim; William Poulson; Jason N. MacTaggart
UNLABELLED In situ longitudinal (axial) pre-stretch (LPS) plays a fundamental role in the mechanics of the femoropopliteal artery (FPA). It conserves energy during pulsation and prevents buckling of the artery during limb movement. We investigated how LPS is affected by demographics and risk factors, and how these patient characteristics associate with the structural and physiologic features of the FPA. LPS was measured in n=148 fresh human FPAs (14-80 years old). Mechanical properties were characterized with biaxial extension and histopathological characteristics were quantified with Verhoeff-Van Gieson Staining. Constitutive modeling was used to calculate physiological stresses and stretches which were then analyzed in the context of demographics, risk factors and structural characteristics. Age had the strongest negative effect (r=-0.812, p<0.01) on LPS and could alone explain 66% of LPS variability. Male gender, higher body mass index, hypertension, diabetes, coronary artery disease, dyslipidemia and tobacco use had negative effects on LPS, but only the effect of tobacco was not associated with aging. FPAs with less pre-stretch had thicker medial layers, but thinner intramural elastic fibers with less dense and more fragmented external elastic laminae. Elastin degradation was associated with decreased physiological tethering force and longitudinal stress, while circumferential stress remained constant. FPA wall pathology was negatively associated with LPS (r=-0.553, p<0.01), but the effect was due primarily to aging. LPS in the FPA may serve as an energy reserve for adaptive remodeling. Reduction of LPS due to degradation and fragmentation of intramural longitudinal elastin during aging can be accelerated in tobacco users. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE This work studies in situ longitudinal pre-stretch (LPS) in the human femoropopliteal artery. LPS has a fundamental role in arterial mechanics, but is rather poorly studied due to lack of direct in vivo measurement method. We have investigated LPS in the n=148 human femoropopliteal arteries in the context of subject demographics and risk factors, and structural and physiologic characteristics of the artery. Our results demonstrate that LPS reduces with age due to degradation and fragmentation of intramural elastin. LPS may serve as an energy reserve for adaptive remodeling, and reduction of LPS can be accelerated in tobacco users.
Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2016
Jason N. MacTaggart; William Poulson; Maheen Akhter; Andreas Seas; Katherine Thorson; Nick Y. Phillips; Anastasia Desyatova; Alexey Kamenskiy
BACKGROUND Uncontrolled hemorrhage from vessel injuries within the torso remains a significant source of prehospital trauma mortality. Resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta can effectively control noncompressible hemorrhage, but this minimally invasive technique relies heavily on imaging not available in the field. Our goal was to develop morphometric roadmaps to enhance the safety and accuracy of fluoroscopy-free endovascular navigation of hemorrhage control devices. METHODS Three-dimensional reconstructions of computed tomographic angiography scans from 122 trauma patients (mean [SD] age, 47 [24] years; range 5–93 years; 64 males; 58 females) were used to measure centerline distances from femoral artery access sites to the major aortic branch artery origins. Morphometric roadmap equations were created using multiple linear regression analysis to predict distances to the origins of the major arteries in the chest, abdomen, and pelvis using torso length, demographics, and risk factors as independent variables. A 40-mm-long occlusion balloon was then virtually deployed targeting Zones 1 and 3 of the aorta using these equations. Balloon placement accuracy was determined by comparing predicted versus actual measured distances to the target zone locations within the aortas from the database. RESULTS Torso length and age were the strongest predictors of centerline distances from femoral artery access sites to the major artery origins. Male sex contributed to longer distances, while diabetes and smoking were associated with shorter distances. Hypertension, dyslipidemia, and coronary artery disease had no effect. With the use of morphometric roadmaps, virtual occlusion balloon placement accuracy was 100% for Zone 3 of the aorta, compared with 87% accuracy when using torso length alone. CONCLUSION Morphometric roadmaps demonstrate a potential for improving the safety and accuracy of fluoroscopy-free aortic occlusion balloon delivery. Continued development of minimally invasive hemorrhage control techniques holds promise to improve prehospital mortality for patients with noncompressible exsanguinating torso injuries. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Therapeutic study, level IV; diagnostic study, level III.
Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2017
Anastasia Desyatova; William Poulson; Paul Deegan; Carol Lomneth; Andreas Seas; Kaspars Maleckis; Jason N. MacTaggart; Alexey Kamenskiy
High failure rates of femoropopliteal artery (FPA) interventions are often attributed to severe mechanical deformations that occur with limb movement. Torsion of the FPA likely plays a significant role, but is poorly characterized and the associated intramural stresses are currently unknown. FPA torsion in the walking, sitting and gardening postures was characterized in n = 28 in situ FPAs using intra-arterial markers. Principal mechanical stresses and strains were quantified in the superficial femoral artery (SFA), adductor hiatus segment (AH) and the popliteal artery (PA) using analytical modelling. The FPA experienced significant torsion during limb flexion that was most severe in the gardening posture. The associated mechanical stresses were non-uniformly distributed along the length of the artery, increasing distally and achieving maximum values in the PA. Maximum twist in the SFA ranged 10–13° cm−1, at the AH 8–16° cm−1, and in the PA 14–26° cm−1 in the walking, sitting and gardening postures. Maximum principal stresses were 30–35 kPa in the SFA, 27–37 kPa at the AH and 39–43 kPa in the PA. Understanding torsional deformations and intramural stresses in the FPA can assist with device selection for peripheral arterial disease interventions and may help guide the development of devices with improved characteristics.
Journal of The Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials | 2017
Kaspars Maleckis; Paul Deegan; William Poulson; Cole Sievers; Anastasia Desyatova; Jason N. MacTaggart; Alexey Kamenskiy
High failure rates of Peripheral Arterial Disease (PAD) stenting appear to be associated with the inability of certain stent designs to accommodate severe biomechanical environment of the femoropopliteal artery (FPA) that bends, twists, and axially compresses during limb flexion. Twelve Nitinol stents (Absolute Pro, Supera, Lifestent, Innova, Zilver, Smart Control, Smart Flex, EverFlex, Viabahn, Tigris, Misago, and Complete SE) were quasi-statically tested under bench-top axial and radial compression, axial tension, bending, and torsional deformations. Stents were compared in terms of force-strain behavior, stiffness, and geometrical shape under each deformation mode. Tigris was the least stiff stent under axial compression (6.6N/m axial stiffness) and bending (0.1N/m) deformations, while Smart Control was the stiffest (575.3N/m and 105.4N/m, respectively). Under radial compression Complete SE was the stiffest (892.8N/m), while Smart Control had the lowest radial stiffness (211.0N/m). Viabahn and Supera had the lowest and highest torsional stiffness (2.2μNm/° and 959.2μNm/°), respectively. None of the 12 PAD stents demonstrated superior characteristics under all deformation modes and many experienced global buckling and diameter pinching. Though it is yet to be determined which of these deformation modes might have greater clinical impact, results of the current analysis may help guide development of new stents with improved mechanical characteristics.
Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology | 2018
Anastasia Desyatova; Jason N. MacTaggart; Rodrigo M. Romarowski; William Poulson; Michele Conti; Alexey Kamenskiy
Femoropopliteal artery (FPA) reconstructions are notorious for poor clinical outcomes. Mechanical and flow conditions that occur in the FPA with limb flexion are thought to play a significant role, but are poorly characterized. FPA deformations due to acute limb flexion were quantified using a human cadaver model and used to build a finite element model that simulated surrounding tissue forces associated with limb flexion-induced deformations. Strains and intramural principal mechanical stresses were determined for seven age groups. Computational fluid dynamics analysis was performed to assess hemodynamic variables. FPA shape, stresses, and hemodynamics significantly changed with age. Younger arteries assumed straighter positions in the flexed limb with less pronounced bends and more uniform stress distribution along the length of the artery. Even in the flexed limb posture, FPAs younger than 50 years of age experienced tension, while older FPAs experienced compression. Aging resulted in localization of principal mechanical stresses to the adductor hiatus and popliteal artery below the knee that are typically prone to developing vascular pathology. Maximum principal stresses in these areas increased threefold to fivefold with age with largest increase observed at the adductor hiatus. Atheroprotective wall shear stress reduced after 35 years of age, and atheroprone and oscillatory shear stresses increased after the age of 50. These data can help better understand FPA pathophysiology and can inform the design of targeted materials and devices for peripheral arterial disease treatments.
Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2018
Alexey Kamenskiy; William Poulson; Sylvie Sim; Austin Reilly; Jiangtao Luo; Jason N. MacTaggart
Objective— Arterial calcification and stiffening increase the risk of reconstruction failure, amputation, and mortality in patients with peripheral arterial disease, but underlying mechanisms and prevalence are unclear. Approach and Results— Fresh human femoropopliteal arteries were obtained from n=431 tissue donors aged 13 to 82 years (mean age, 53±16 years) recording the in situ longitudinal prestretch. Arterial diameter, wall thickness, and opening angles were measured optically, and stiffness was assessed using planar biaxial extension and constitutive modeling. Histological features were determined using transverse and longitudinal Verhoeff–Van Gieson and Alizarin stains. Medial calcification was quantified using a 7-stage grading scale and was correlated with structural and mechanical properties and clinical characteristics. Almost half (46%) of the femoropopliteal arteries had identifiable medial calcification. Older arteries were more calcified, but small calcium deposits were observed in arteries as young as 18 years old. After controlling for age, positive correlations were observed between calcification, diabetes mellitus, dyslipidemia, and body mass index. Tobacco use demonstrated a negative correlation. Calcified arteries were larger in diameter but had smaller circumferential opening angles. They were also stiffer longitudinally and circumferentially and had thinner tunica media and external elastic lamina with more discontinuous elastic fibers. Conclusions— Although aging is the dominant risk factor for femoropopliteal artery calcification and stiffening, these processes seem to be linked and can begin at a young age. Calcification is associated with the presence of certain risk factors and with elastic fiber degradation, suggesting overlapping molecular pathways that require further investigation.
Annals of Biomedical Engineering | 2018
Kaspars Maleckis; Eric Anttila; Paul Aylward; William Poulson; Anastasia Desyatova; Jason N. MacTaggart; Alexey Kamenskiy
Endovascular stenting has matured into a commonly used treatment for peripheral arterial disease (PAD) due to its minimally invasive nature and associated reductions in short-term morbidity and mortality. The mechanical properties of the superelastic Nitinol alloy have played a major role in the explosion of peripheral artery stenting, with modern stents demonstrating reasonable resilience and durability. Yet in the superficial femoral and popliteal arteries, even the newest generation Nitinol stents continue to demonstrate clinical outcomes that leave significant room for improvement. Restenosis and progression of native arterial disease often lead to recurrence of symptoms and reinterventions that increase morbidity and health care expenditures. One of the main factors thought to be associated with stent failure in the femoropopliteal artery (FPA) is the unique and highly dynamic mechanical environment of the lower limb. Clinical and experimental data demonstrate that the FPA undergoes significant deformations with limb flexion. It is hypothesized that the inability of many existing stent designs to conform to these deformations likely plays a role in reconstruction failure, as repetitive movements of the leg and thigh combine with mechanical mismatch between the artery and the stent and result in mechanical damage to both the artery and the stent. In this review we will identify challenges and provide a mechanical perspective of FPA stenting, and then discuss current research directions with promise to provide a better understanding of Nitinol, specific features of stent design, and improved characterization of the biomechanical environment of the FPA to facilitate development of better stents for patients with PAD.
Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2018
Anastasia Desyatova; William Poulson; Jason N. MacTaggart; Kaspars Maleckis; Alexey Kamenskiy
High failure rates of femoropopliteal artery (FPA) interventions are often attributed to severe mechanical deformations that occur with limb flexion. One of these deformations, cross-sectional pinching, has a direct effect on blood flow, but is poorly characterized. Intra-arterial markers were deployed into n = 50 in situ cadaveric FPAs (80 ± 12 years old, 14F/11M), and limbs were imaged in standing, walking, sitting and gardening postures. Image analysis was used to measure marker openings and calculate FPA pinching. Parametric finite element analysis on a stent section was used to determine the optimal combination of stent strut amplitude, thickness and the number of struts per section to maximize cross-sectional opening and minimize intramural mechanical stress and low wall shear stress. Pinching was higher distally and increased with increasing limb flexion. In the walking, sitting and gardening postures, it was 1.16–1.24, 1.17–1.26 and 1.19–1.35, respectively. Stent strut amplitude and thickness had strong effects on both intramural stresses and pinching. Stents with a strut amplitude of 3 mm, thickness of 175 µm and 20 struts per section produced pinching and intramural stresses typical for a non-stented FPA, while also minimizing low wall shear stress areas, and ensuring a stent lifespan of at least 107 cycles. These results can help guide the development of improved devices and materials to treat peripheral arterial disease.
Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology | 2017
Alexey Kamenskiy; Andreas Seas; Paul Deegan; William Poulson; Eric Anttila; Sylvie Sim; Anastasia Desyatova; Jason N. MacTaggart
Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2017
William Poulson; Alexey Kamenskiy; Andreas Seas; Paul Deegan; Carol Lomneth; Jason N. MacTaggart